Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Ricky26wales

Member
  • Posts

    31
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Ricky26wales's Achievements

Contributor

Contributor (5/14)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

  1. Nice one lads. Good news. What i wanted to hear too. sounds like its worth doing then. Cheers. Its a saw I got given by my boss. But before that it was our main climbers so its a few years old and had some use. Ive had it retuned and new carb but it has a very hesitant rev. As in its delayed.It does pick up to soeed but not straight away but frustrating to use. I'm a rubbish mechanic and know little about how to fix major problems with saws so I will be sending it off to someone soon. Also could someone explain what porting a saw means? Is it possible to do with an old saw? And is it worth doing to a brand new saw? Thanks again.
  2. is it worth paying to have a climbing saw refurbed? Are there any specialists out there that do it? As in is it worth paying for if someones willing to do it? I will be buying a new saw but also would like to have a spare in good working order. i've had minor work done on it but my local shop arn't that good. Just wondered if anyone bothers doing this or is it a waste of time and money. Cheers
  3. Hi, what sort of money are you looking at for the boots?

  4. Have a pair of boots for sale if anyone is interested. As the title says, size 11 brand new in the box. After buying them realized they were the wrong size. Been over a year now and thought would just sell them on here if anyones interested. Nothing wrong with them just a size too big for me. Anyone interested just send me a message. Or reply on here. Cheers. And there brown in colour if colour matters to anyone.
  5. Did the same thing to my grub screw. What a nightmare eh! I too was too heavy handed on the tightening but what a joke. Such a massive cost for the SJ and yet no hint atall at how sensitive the change over of grub screw should be. My mate has the lock jack and cam change over looks alot easier and screws more solid looking.. Maybe they will make a SJ 2.2 to try rinse us of even more money. I sent mine back to HB who sent it back to ART Germany who re-threaded it. Job done. Cheers HB. Dont have to buy new SJ. And there are other threads of similar stories. So we're not the first.
  6. Hi I'm looking for any info from people who have been and lived and worked in Australia. I went there in 2003 on a 12 month working holiday visa but only worked for about a month and stayed for about 2-3 months in total. This puts me out of luck for getting a 2nd working holiday visa as you have to do atleast 3 months agricultural/horticultural work on your original work visa. I've heard of alot of British people out in Australia and New Zealand working full time. I know sponsorship is another way to go but how do you get a sponsor? It seems hard to secure a job from the UK as most employers would want to see who they are taking on and what they are capable of. I'm looking to go in the next couple of years but wondering whqats the best way of doing things. I've heard of alot of jobs and work available all over Australia. I was hoping to travel to Oz for a month or so to seek employment and maybe get sponsorship, but as most employers will want to see my work capablitlites what are the legal ways of doing this. Also i'm not a college trained Climber. I've just learnt off the job so only have NPTC's. Any info is greatly appreciated as I really would like to make the big move to Oz.
  7. Dreaded Hawthawn. We did a job on DIY SOS. Sure some of you have seen the programme on TV. Not sure when it will be on. Anyway, one of our brash draggers gets a bit over aggresive when you pass him something to chip, so he yanked this long hawthawn branch off me and I felt a numbness in my right forarm. For the next 4-5 weeks it was just like a pussy swollen mess on my arm. Squeezed it everyday but nothing but puss and liquid. Then one day pulled on a pulling rope pretty hard and saw this sharp thing poking out the pussy mess on my arm. Just managed to grab the tip of it and pull it out. It was still the most pleasing thing I have ever done at work getting that bugger out. It was like the thickness of a match stick and over a cm long. 1 week later I pull the scab off and another cm long splinter comes with it out the same hole. Disgusting but very pleasurable. Still sure theres something left in there.
  8. How did it feel with a bit of bounce and stretch in the rope? Was it with spiderjack? Anyone else struggle using spiderjack with their left hand??
  9. Got my rope delivered today. 50 meter hi vee ivy. Looks awsome and feels really nice and doesnt look too thin. Sods law that tomorrows job is a crappy roadside traffic light job. I think it will just have to be fed through my spiderjack as you said, tail first. What happens if you have a double splice?? And that piece of velcro is so sh1te! Keeps coming off.
  10. Cheers for all the good replies lads. Just ordered Poison Ivy rope from honey bros but completley forgot to specify I wanted a spliced eye. Looking back at the site though there wasn't an option where you could specify wanting a spliced eye but most of the other ropes you could choose. Sent them an email anyway so hopefully they'll sort it.
  11. Hi people and sorry as I know spiderjack has been done to death. I'm a fairly new climber (6 months+) and recently got my spiderjack which I'm loving. Problem is i have a 13mm xtc rope. Obviously things aqrn't running as smooth as I'd like so was thinking of moving to poison ivy or something similar. I've mentioned to some lads at work that I want to get a thinner rope and they think that smaller rope will ruin my hands as it's alot harder to grip etc. Has anyone moved to smaller rope and not liked it. I want to get the most out my spiderjack and poison ivy sounds like a nice rope even if it is thinner. Also I read a post quite a while back about dismantling with spiderjack, like it should never be used to choke around the stem as a back up while chogging down. What do you spiderjack users do once you've stripped a tree and it's time to chog down. Back to friction cord? Figure of 8? I'm after something thats safe and practical without too much messing about. And don't know if it's due to the thickness of my rope but once my SJ is fullyloaded with my weight I sometimes find it hard for it to release straight away when I want it to. Seems to jam a bit unless I pull on the rope abit to get a bit of weight off the SJ but then it releases fine and runs as it should. Sorry if that sounds confusing. Any pointers would be appreciated. And that velcro that came with SJ lasted about 20 minutes until it had pulled itself off the SJ. Didn't see how just noticed once I was out the tree. Cheers
  12. Thanks for the tips guys. And the pics too, nice shape after the reduction. Seems most the reductions i've ever done have been Birch trees. Anybody else got any before and after pictures? Cheers again.
  13. Thanks for the tips. All good advice. I've had a chat with one of the lads about the orange peel technique, it has helped me a few times but some trees i've done have had a weird shape for the orange peel way to work properly. Also splitting the tree into quarters sounds like a good idea. Struggled with getting a decent anchor point today ay the tree had been reduced in height in the past so the tops were a bit weak and flimsy. Practice practice and more practice I suppose. Thanks for the responses.
  14. Hi guys, i'm fairly new to climbing and seems latley we've had a fair amount of reductions being done. I'm still at the point when I find out what the days job is and I hear the dreaded word "reduction" my heart sinks. I've done a few now, nothing massive and all with the help of a very experienced groundy. Anybody feel the same as me when they first started doing reductions? Work with good guys with great skills just wouldn't mind any pointers or to hear I'm not the only one that dreads them. Cheers
  15. SIP full protection. Awesome pants, well made,strong. Black with a white stitching pattern, and I like them because alot of chainsaw trousers seem to have the "drainpipe" look. Not a fan of that myself. But the full protection are hot and ya do feel like your wearing armored pants. Comfy though considering. Also another thing that used to piss me off about my old Husky pants is when your climbing and the harness keeps making your pants ride up at the leg so the bottom of your pants is half way up ya shin. Me personally anyways. Good luck.

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.